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| | | 'I see him walking his dog in the park' – how serial killer Bible John traumatised Glasgow | | by Hollie Richardson Nov 1, 2022 | | She was a baby when her city was terrorised by the unsolved murders of three women. Now Audrey Gillan has made a podcast about the victims’ lives – and the misogyny of the police investigation Throughout the 1960s, suited, booted and elaborately coiffed Glaswegians would come to the Barrowlands, the city’s biggest ballroom, to escape the humdrum via a boozy combination of colour, glitter, dancing and debauchery. By the end of the decade, though, a shadow was cast over the venue, after three women’s bodies were found on the streets, on each occasion within hours of them leaving the dancehall. Glasgow was – and is to this day – haunted by the man believed to be their killer: Bible John. “The city that loved dancing was suddenly living in fear of a killer who was picking his victims on the dancefloor,” says Glaswegian Audrey Gillan, who was two weeks old when the first victim was murdered. “They saw an artist’s sketch of him and thought, ‘That’s the guy at the corner shop.’ Or, ‘I see him walking his dog in the park.’ It changed the way women felt – and children like myself grew up thinking he was a bogeyman.” Continue reading... | | | | | Hunt review – Squid Game's Lee Jung-jae directs stunt-filled spy flick | | by Leslie Felperin Nov 1, 2022 | | Lee Jung-jae’s directorial debut, set in 1980s South Korea, is busy to the point of exhaustion and ends up chasing its own tail This whirling, churning, exhaustingly busy – but lavishly produced – Korean action-thriller film is directed by and stars Lee Jung-jae, who played the down-on-his-luck protagonist Seong in Squid Game. Although he’s been a big name for years in South Korea, starting out as a heartthrob in the 1990s, his current fame in the west probably explains why the film was selected for Cannes and other festivals this year. That means it’s available to audiences who probably won’t know the historical context vital to understanding the plot. It’s worth some pre-viewing brushing up on South Korea in 1983, when the film was set – the regime was deeply repressive at the time and the country was riven by internal protests, while tensions with North Korea were (literally) explosive. If you keep all that in mind and think of this as a John Le Carré-style story, set in Asia and on speed, it makes a bit more sense. Lee plays Park Pyong-ho, the chief of the foreign unit of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA), who is locked in a power struggle with his counterpart Kim Jung-do (Jung Woo-sung) from the domestic unit of the KCIA – especially after president Chun Doo-hwan is almost assassinated while visiting the United States. It turns out there is a North Korean mole operating within the KCIA, and both Park and Kim are assigned to head competing teams to find out who it is. Continue reading... | | | | | |
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